As the war unfolds, Tech experts offer their thoughts on what happened, what comes next, and how the U.S. will be involved.
The new leaders of the undergraduate Student Government Association begin their terms at a critical moment in Georgia Tech’s history and want to bring students to the table.
The Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts recently hosted a discussion examining Georgia’s rise to becoming one of the most intriguing political battlegrounds for 2024 and beyond.
With the simultaneous theatrical releases of Oppenheimer and Barbie, three Tech professors share how the "atomic bomb and the atomic blonde" remain cultural icons central to the modern American imagination.
Mariel Borowitz and Jon Lindsay of the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs will help lead a series of public wargaming exercises to test the limits of U.S. deterrence strategies in space.
Inclusivity and understanding past policies and their effects on underserved and marginalized communities must be part of urban planning, design, and public policy efforts for cities.
Will Roper, a Georgia Tech alumnus and a distinguished professor of the practice in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, has joined the Defense Innovation Board, an advisory panel for the U.S. Secretary of Defense.
Study finds bias is driven by backlash after students receive first exam grades.
Associate Professor Shatakshee Dhongde's paper her latest in a series of work on the topic and the first to break down multidimensional poverty on a state-by-state level over more than a decade.
The rising sea levels along Georgia’s Savannah coast and an uptick in more severe storms during hurricane season are bellwethers to looming ecological challenges stemming from climate change.